WHAT THE ARMY LEARNED ABOUT RACE DURING WWII
There are countless reasons to be proud of America’s military achievements in WWII. One achievement that deserves more recognition than it gets is the progress the Army made during and shortly after the war in dealing with race. In 1940, the military had fewer than 2% African Americans, almost all of whom were in segregated, low-level jobs. Ten years after the war, the last all-Black units had been disbanded, and a quarter million Black men and women were intermingled with Whites in our nation’s military services. The history of this change should be a source of pride for all Americans and an inspiration for the possibility of future change. The history is not simply a story of Black-White relations, but one that involves the full range of people who have made America great.
Closing Ondal Advance Chemical Park
Eighty years ago in September 1945, U.S. soldiers still faced real dangers and challenges, and many were called on to display true heroism. At the time, my father, Sgt. Roger Thomas, was newly arrived in India and was serving as a Toxic Gas Handler with the 771st Chemical Depot Company (Aviation) at Ondal Advanced Chemical Park in West Bengal. He was one of many replacements for more experienced soldiers who had been managing the CBI’s central stockpile of toxic chemical bombs. The bombs were filled with the same toxins that had been used during WWI, but had been manufactured and deployed in far greater quantities for possible “retaliation in kind” if Germany or Japan again initiated chemical warfare.
The Heroism of Logistics, April 1945
Eighty years ago, in April 1945, a detachment of one officer and seven enlisted men from the 757th Chemical Depot Company were finally given the forward assignment they wanted. Their orders sent them from their Company’s base at Hickam Field in Hawaii to the Mariana Islands to assist in the firebombing attacks then being conducted on Japanese cities. Although personnel of the 757th had experience and expertise with both toxic chemical bombs and the most sophisticated of America’s incendiary bombs, this mission was planned to help fill a critical shortage of standard incendiary bombs with the quick delivery of low-tech barrel bombs.